From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today

From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today is a 1982 American documentary directed by Helena Solberg and co-produced by Glenn Silber.[2]

From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today
Directed byHelena Solberg
Produced byGlenn Silber
Melanie Maholick
Written bySaul Landau
Production
company
National Endowment for the Humanities
PBS
International Women's Film Project[1]
Distributed byRadiante Filmes
Release date
7 April 1982 (U.S.)
Running time
60 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

This documentary probes the human realities and the political complexities of life in Nicaragua following the 1979 insurrection that overthrew the Somoza dictatorship. Providing a personalized perspective on the country's past and present are the Chavarrias, a family of six. Their comments are accompanied by archival footage documenting the presence of U.S. Marines in Nicaragua from 1912 to 1933, the rise of rebel leader Augusto Sandino and scenes from the bloody civil war including the murder of ABC-TV newsman Bill Stewart by Somoza's National Guard. The film also explores issues such as the national literacy campaign, the changing relations between the sexes, the social activist role of the church, the agrarian reform movement, the revolution's impact on private business and the training of Nicaraguan exiles at a Florida military camp in preparation for contra attacks in Nicaragua.[3]

Reception

The film was criticized for "present a one-sided, pro-Sandinist point of view." The accusations were made by the American Catholic Committee, an anti-Communist organization of lay Catholics headed by James McFadden, a former New York City Labor Commissioner.[4] Despite the controversy, From the Ashes: Nicaragua Today won a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Background-Analysis of Current Story: Programs.[5]

References


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